If your Windows operating system is not installed on drive C, you can simply format using the inbuilt formatting tool. Otherwise, you need to boot your computer using an operating system on different drive to format C.
format specifier in c is %
It erases all your data on the disk which you specified, fofr instance, format C:. It will format (erase) all your data from C.
format /s c: should do the job.
You might be wrong: printf and scanf are usable in C++ just as in C. With format specifiers.
Run the Windows installation and format it from there.
No.
you can't format the drive that you're running windows from while in windows. use the setup disk to run a recovery console and you should be able to format it from there using format c:
Boot from something OTHER than C: The OS will not allow you to format the disk from which the computer has currently loaded. Many OS disks will allow you to reformat the C: drive, and you can even create a bootable floppy that has format capability.
Nothing.
Format specifier is a sequence passed the as the formatting data as by argument
In Windows XP Go to: Start>Programs>Accessories> Command Prompt.At the command prompt enter: format c:/This will format and erase all of the data on the c: drive. If you also have a d: drive then do a format d:/ command before you do the format of the c: drive.Caution: be sure you want all of the data erased as this action is not reversable.
Yes, you can. Just boot up in restore mode and use command format C: (or disk which you want to format).